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Comments on Puzzle #34641: Droodle #12
By Bill Eisenmann (Bullet)

peek at solution       solve puzzle
  quality:   difficulty:   solvability: some guessing  

Puzzle Description Suppressed:Click below to view spoilers

#1: Bill Eisenmann (Bullet) on Oct 30, 2020 [SPOILER]

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#2: besmirched tea (Besmirched Tea) on Oct 31, 2020
I actually guessed one!
#3: Ailsa Hebert (bazette3) on Nov 1, 2020
Totally awesome puzzle!! Loved the solve. When I got as far as I could and found that nothing worked I moved the 5 across on line 4 to the extreme left and the 5 across on line 5 to the extreme right. You find that it doesn't work so I moved the top one one space and took it from there. Great solve!!!
#4: Kristen Vognild (kristen) on Nov 1, 2020 [HINT]
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#5: Joe (infrapinklizzard) on Apr 22, 2021 [HINT]
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#6: Web Paint-By-Number Robot (webpbn) on Apr 22, 2021
Found to require some guessing by infrapinklizzard.
#7: Tom Siebert (tsiebert) on Oct 23, 2021
Doesn't require any guessing at all once you see that it's symmetrical. Draw the outer square, take out the rest of the otherwise blank rows and columns, put that top 5 in the middle of the area that remains, and the rest just falls into place. Took me only a few minutes to solve.
#8: Bill Eisenmann (Bullet) on Oct 25, 2021
Yes Tom, I assumed that just by looking at the pattern of the clues you could assume symmetry.

You sophisticated solvers out there, is that a fair assumption?

Seems to be, otherwise wouldn't it be marked Multiple Solutions?
#9: Tom Siebert (tsiebert) on Nov 8, 2021
Bill, you would have to look at both the horizontal and vertical clues. If the clues in one direction, usually horizontal, are palindromes AND the clues in the other direction follow identical patterns from the outside in, you can assume symmetry. You can't assume with one direction clues alone.

I don't have the patience to test any of them, but I expect the symmetry assures a unique solution. If the pbn robot thinks otherwise, I'd like to see one such "wrong" solution. Trial and error isn't the same as guessing.
#10: Joe (infrapinklizzard) on Nov 9, 2021
Tom, a checkerboard would have complete symmetry in both axes, but would still have two solutions.

And *for the purposes of this site* trial and error beyond a reasonable degree (what one might be expected to keep in one's head) *is* considered guessing.
#11: Tom Siebert (tsiebert) on Mar 14, 2022
[And *for the purposes of this site* trial and error beyond a reasonable degree (what one might be expected to keep in one's head) *is* considered guessing.]

I disagree. I don't apply different rules to this site than I would to any other problem. Trial and error is experimenting. If I have to start experimenting, I do so in a direction that I believe is probably wrong until logic confirms it, eventually (hopefully) honing in on the only solution that works.

Some puzzles say that guessing is REQUIRED. If you guess what you believe to be correct and get to the end, then yes, you got there by guessing, but have in no way confirmed it as the only way to have gotten there. When I post on those puzzles that guessing is NOT required, I do so because I've logically verified that there is in fact only one solution.

If a puzzle has more than one solution that meets all the criteria set out in the clues, only then is guessing required.

Your checkerboard is indeed an example where dual symmetry does NOT assure a unique solution. It does assure a really boring and annoying puzzle though.
#12: Gator (gator) on Mar 22, 2022 [HINT]
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#13: David Bouldin (dbouldin) on Apr 17, 2024 [HINT]
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